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During the Shield of the Americas summit in Florida on Saturday, outgoing Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem thanked President Donald Trump for appointing her to a newly created role after she was ousted from overseeing the agency.

Noem, who is moving to the newly created position of special envoy for the Shield of the Americas, showed no ill feelings toward the president and said she was proud of her work at DHS, arguing the department had secured the border and eliminated public safety threats.

‘I do want to thank the president for creating this and for giving me the honor and the opportunity to serve as a special envoy to this region, to the Western Hemisphere,’ Noem said during the summit at Trump National Doral outside Miami. 

‘This Shield of the Americas will be a powerful example to the rest of the world about what’s possible.’

Trump announced this week that Noem would shift into the new role after cutting short her tenure at DHS. 

Noem was removed as the nation’s immigration chief after a turbulent stretch marked by internal clashes and two contentious congressional hearings where even some Republicans pressed her over leadership missteps, including the ad campaign, which she claimed the president had signed off on.

Noem framed the initiative as an effort to expand border security cooperation beyond the United States.

‘The way that we cooperate on our shared ideals of freedom and of democracy and safety and security will be a shining light to all of those who wish to be more like all of us,’ she said.

Noem, who previously served in Congress and as South Dakota governor before leading DHS, defended her record overseeing immigration enforcement during the past year.

‘In the last year, as secretary of Homeland Security, we have focused on securing our border,’ she said. ‘We have transformed our country from one that was being invaded by enemies, millions of them that were coming in unvetted, that we didn’t know who was there and who wished to harm us.’

‘We’ve secured that border,’ she continued. ‘We’ve focused on removing public safety threats, and over 3 million people have been deported or removed from our country in the last year.’

Noem argued that stronger border enforcement has allowed the administration to pivot toward economic and diplomatic engagement with neighboring nations.

‘Secure borders has changed everything for our country,’ she said. ‘Now that America is secure and our borders are secure, we want to focus on our neighbors and to help our neighbors with their borders and challenges that they have so that they may have the security that we enjoy.’

Trump announced on Truth Social that Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., will replace her effective March 31, while Noem shifts to the newly created envoy role.

Members of Trump’s Cabinet, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick and United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer attended Saturday’s summit. 

Leaders from other nations included Argentina’s Javier Milei, El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele Ortez, Bolivia’s Rodrigo Paz Pereira, Costa Rica’s Rodrigo Chaves Robles, Panama’s José Raúl Mulino Quintero, and Trinidad and Tobago’s Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Chile’s Jose Antonio Kast, the Dominican Republic’s Luis Rodolfo Abinader Corona, Ecuador’s Daniel Roy Gilchrist Noboa Azín, Guyana’s Mohamed Irfaan Ali, Honduras’ Nasry ‘Tito’ Asfura and Paraguay’s Santiago Peña.

Notably missing were the leaders of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, and Mexico, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo.

Fox News Digital’s Alec Schemmel contributed to this report.

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– British opposition leader Nigel Farage is taking aim at his country’s prime minister for not supporting the U.S. in its military strikes against Iran.

‘I think not to support America when it asks for support is a pretty extraordinary thing to have done.,’ Farage, the leader of the right-wing Reform UK party, said in an exclusive interview Saturday with Fox News Digital.

President Donald Trump has blasted Labor Prime Minister Keir Starmer for initially blocking the U.S. from using British military bases, specifically Diego Garcia — a strategic base located on an Indian Ocean island — for strikes against Iran during Operation Epic Fury. Starmer later permitted the use of the bases for ‘defensive strikes’ after Trump’s complaints. 

Starmer hasn’t spoken to Trump since they connected on a call last weekend, after the U.S. and Israel launched their strikes on Iran. The British prime minister has made clear his country would not be joining the U.S. in attacking Iran, emphasizing he didn’t believe in ‘regime change from the skies.’

Trump, taking a jab at Starmer, said earlier this week, ‘This is not Winston Churchill we are dealing with.’

Farage criticized Starmer for not changing his stance, ‘even now, despite the fact that we’ve got an RAF base in Cyprus that’s been under attack, we’ve got allies of ours in the Gulf that are under attack.’

‘I think there’s been less than wholehearted support has come for the Americans in this endeavor. And I think the British Prime Minister on the world stage, he’s upset the Americans,’ Farage said. ‘He’s upset the Cypriots. He’s upset the Gulf states. And he’s pretty friendless at the moment.’

Farage, who seven years ago founded the populist Brexit Party, which later transformed into the Reform UK party, was interviewed ahead of an appearance at an annual economic conference in Florida hosted by the Club for Growth, an influential and politically potent political group that pushes for fiscal responsibility.

Starmer has been feeling Trump’s wrath not only for their differences over the attack on Iran, but also over the British deal to hand sovereignty of the Chagos Islands, the Indian Ocean archipelago where Diego Garcia is located, to Mauritius. Starmer has argued his lease-back deal is the only way to secure the British-U.S. military base on Diego Garcia.

Farage, who has been vocal in his opposition to the deal, told Fox News Digital that ‘outside of America itself,’ Diego Garcia ‘is the most important base you’ve got in the whole world. Now it’s there as part of British sovereignty. We have a treaty between us that goes back to 1966 and Keir Starmer is on the verge of giving away the sovereignty of the Chagos islands and Diego Garcia to Mauritius.’

‘If Trump initially had problems with the Brits over using the base, just think what it will be like with the heavily Chinese-influenced Mauritians. They already have said they believe that America should not have struck Iran, that it was against international law, then are calling for a ceasefire,’ Farage said.

Farage, who said his opposition to the deal was a key factor in his weekend trip to the U.S., said, ‘I would just urge the president, this administration, stay firm. Tell the British government you will not accept giving away of sovereignty to Mauritius, and let’s ensure a future for Diego Garcia. I think it’s really important.’

Farage, who’s hoping to become Britain’s next prime minister, argued that Starmer’s relationship with Trump is beyond repair.

‘I think the personal relationship between Keir Starmer and Donald Trump has gone. I mean, Trump can be forgiving, but, you know, that would take a long time. So I think that breakdown is there,’ he said.

But as for the longstanding bonds between the two countries, known as the ‘special relationship,’ Farage was more optimistic.

‘The special relationship went through bad times in the past. We had a massive fallout 70 years ago over Suez, but we got back together again. I’m convinced it can, and it will, be mended,’ he predicted.

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. – One week into the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran, two Republican senators on the Senate Armed Services Committee say the military operation has ‘degraded’ Tehran’s ability to strike back.

But in exclusive interviews with Fox News Digital, Sens. Rick Scott of Florida and Ted Budd of North Carolina emphasized that the fighting will not lead to U.S. involvement in ‘forever wars’ in the volatile Middle East.

‘Our military is doing a great job,’ Scott said. And pointing to Iran, he said, ‘They want to destroy America. We’ve got to stop them.’

Budd highlighted that ‘we have significantly degraded Iran’s ability to shoot back at us… their capacities are degraded. We’ve had great success.’

Sen. Ted Budd: ‘We have significantly degraded Iran’s ability to shoot back at us’

Budd and Scott were interviewed as they attended an economic conference in Florida hosted by the Club for Growth, an influential and politically potent conservative group that pushes for fiscal responsibility.

President Donald Trump, who called for Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender,’ said on Saturday that Tehran will be ‘hit very hard’ and warned the U.S. is considering ‘areas and groups’ not previously considered to target.

Over the past week, ‘Operation Epic Fury’ has widened in scope as Iran has retaliated against a growing number of nations in the region. This week, the Republican-controlled House and Senate, in separate votes nearly entirely along party lines, rejected moves by Democrats to restrict the president’s ability to steer the fighting.

The president said on Thursday, in an interview with Axios, that he should be involved in choosing Iran’s next leader. Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed in the initial strikes against Iran a week ago.

And there are concerns among many on the right that the strikes against Iran could lead to prolonged American military involvement in the region, which Trump has repeatedly campaigned against during his three runs for the presidency.

‘Trump doesn’t want to be in forever wars. Every time I’ve talked to him, he doesn’t want that,’ Scott said. ‘But I think what we do want to make sure we don’t have another Ayatollah that wants to… chant Death to America and death to our allies and try to destroy us.’

Budd added that ‘we’re not up for forever wars. We want to get in, get this thing done, get out and have peace for our country and the rest of the region.’

The latest Fox News national poll indicated that American voters are divided on the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, even as a majority sees the country as a security risk. 

Sixty-one percent of those questioned viewed Iran as a danger to the U.S., according to the survey conducted Feb. 28-March 2. But that concern did not translate into majority support for the current U.S. military action, as 50% approved and 50% disapproved.

Support for the attacks was lower in national polling from other news organizations.

But the Fox News poll and the other surveys indicated widespread support among Republicans.

‘Trump’s doing the right thing. He’s saving American lives by making sure that Iran does not have a nuclear weapon or ballistic missile. So he’s doing the right thing,’ Scott emphasized.

Budd added, ‘I’m very excited [about] what President Trump’s done… The goal is American prosperity and American safety, and that’s what President Trump wants.’

Oil prices have shot up since the start of the fighting, instantly resulting in higher costs for gasoline across America. That’s a major concern for Republicans as they aim to keep control of the House and Senate majorities in this year’s midterm elections.

‘Hopefully it’s all going to be short term. Hopefully… the demolition of the Iranian military will happen quickly and actually will get lower oil prices,’ Scott said.

Budd acknowledged that ‘we are going to have some short-term disruptions.’

But the senator was optimistic that ‘very soon we’ll have gas prices much cheaper than ever before. We were already on that pathway. President Trump is all about stability. He’s all about the price of oil.’

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March Madness hasn’t tipped off yet, but Kansas State women’s basketball has emerged as a Cinderella story in the Big 12 women’s basketball tournament.

Kansas State became the first No. 12 seed to advance to the semifinals in Big 12 Tournament history after upsetting No. 4 Oklahoma State in the quarterfinals and No. 5 Texas Tech in the second round via double-digit comebacks. Kansas State also set a tournament record with 17 made 3-pointers vs. Cincinnati in the first round.

The Wildcats are now looking to play spoiler to No. 1 seed TCU in the semifinals on Saturday.

“This team has had a knack for the dramatic wins,” Kansas State head coach Jeff Mittie said on Friday. ‘It feels great to be playing our best basketball in March.”

The Horned Frogs are in pursuit of back-to-back Big 12 Tournament championships. Marta Suarez (17) and Taylor Bigby (13) combined for 30 points in TCU’s 63-46 quarterfinal win over BYU on Friday. Olivia Miles added a double-double with 10 points, 10 rebounds and six assists to set a new TCU single-season assist record (209).

TCU previously defeated Kansas State 77-55 on Dec. 20. Here’s everything you need to know about the Big 12 Tournament semifinal matchup:

Halftime: Kansas State 33, TCU 32

Kansas State may be the first No. 12 seed to advance to the semifinals in Big 12 Tournament history, but the Wildcats aren’t playing like it. Kansas State has a one-point lead over TCU heading into halftime.

TCU hasn’t been playing its brand of basketball so far. The Horned Frogs are controlling the boards (27-11) but losing the turnover battle. TCU coughed up 12 turnovers in the first half, compared to only two for Kansas State.

Marta Suarez has a team-high eight points and four rebounds for the Horned Frogs. Olivia Miles was limited to 13 minutes in the first half after picking up her third personal foul. She has seven points, shooting 2-of-6 from the field and 2-of-3 from the 3-point line.

Olivia Miles in foul trouble early

Olivia Miles is headed to the bench early after picking up her third foul with 7:00 remaining in the second. Kansas State’s Gina Garcia knocked down the and-one free throw to tie the game, 21-21.

End of Q1: Kansas State 13, TCU 10

Kansas State has relied on lengthy runs throughout the Big 12 women’s basketball tournament and they used another to take the lead against TCU after one quarter. The Wildcats ended the first quarter on an 11-2 run to take a 13-10 lead into the second quarter.

Turnovers have been TCU’s kryptonite early. The Horned Frogs surrendered eight first-quarter turnovers, which K-State converted to eight points. As a result, TCU struggled to find any offensive rhythm. TCU started the game 3-of-7 and was scoreless for nearly seven minutes (0-for-7) after that to end the first quarter. Olivia Miles has three points and two fouls for TCU.

Jordan Speiser leads the Wildcats with five points off the bench. Five different Kansas State players recorded a steal.

TCU has five early turnovers

The first Big 12 Tournament semifinal matchup is underway at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. TCU jumped to an 8-2 lead over Kansas State, but the Wildcats upped their defensive intensity and forced the Horned Frogs into five turnovers. The turnovers spurred Kansas State’s 6-0 run to tie it 8-8 with 4:18 remaining in the first quarter.

What time is TCU vs. Kansas State?

The Big 12 women’s basketball tournament’s semifinal round tips off Saturday, March 7, with a matchup between No. 12 Kansas State and No. 1 TCU at 4 p.m. ET at the T-Mobile Center in Kansas City, Missouri. 

  • Date: Saturday, March 7
  • Time: 4 p.m. ET (1 p.m. PT)
  • Location: T-Mobile Center (Kansas City, Missouri)

The winner will advance to the championship game on Sunday, March 8 (5 p.m. ET, ESPN+). Selection Sunday follows on March 15, with March Madness tipping off on March 18.

TCU vs. Kansas State: TV, streaming

The Big 12 women’s basketball tournament semifinal game between TCU and Kansas State will be shown exclusively on ESPN+.

Stream TCU-Kansas State on ESPN+

TCU women’s basketball starting lineup

Head coach: Mark Campbell 

  • 1 Taylor Bigby | G 6-1 – Senior
  • 4 Donovyn Hunter | G 6-0 – Junior
  • 5 Olivia Miles | G 5-10 – Senior
  • 7 Marta Suarez | F 6-3 – Senior
  • 17 Clara Silva | C 6-7 – Sophomore

Kansas State Wildcats starting lineup

Head coach: Jeff Mittie

  • 3 Brandie Harrod | G 6-1 – Freshman
  • 4 Nastja Claessens | F 6-1 – Junior
  • 6 Gina Garcia | G 5-10 – Freshman
  • 11 Taryn Sides  | G 5-7 – Junior
  • 34 Tess Heal | G 5-10 – Senior

TCU women’s basketball roster

Olivia Miles stats

  • 2025-26 average: 19.8 points, 7.0 rebounds, 6.5 assists, 1.9 steals, 48.9 FG%, 34.5% 3PT (32 games)

Miles’ transfer from Notre Dame to TCU has been seamless if you look at her stat line. Miles is the centerpiece of the Horned Frogs’ offense and has upped her scoring average from 15.4 points last season to a career-high 19.8 points. Miles tops the nation with five triple doubles and is the only player to record 600 points, 200 assists and 200 rebounds so far this season. She has done so efficiently, setting career highs in field goal (48.9%) and free throw percentage (84.7%). Miles was named Big 12 Player of the Year and Newcomer of the Year, following in the footsteps of Hailey Van Lith. Miles’ 209 assists broke TCU’s single-season assist record set by Van Lith last season (204).

K State women’s basketball roster

Kansas State X-Factor: Jordan Speiser 

Kansas State freshman guard Jordan Speiser has been a breakout star for the Wildcats at the Big 12 Tournament. Speiser recorded a career-high 21 points off the bench in Kansas State’s 74-73 upset of Oklahoma State, shooting 8-of-13 from the field and 5-of-10 from the 3-point line. Speiser is 13-of 25 from the 3-point line through three games at the tournament. 

Big 12 women’s basketball tournament 2026

All times Eastern

Saturday, March 7- Semifinals

  • Game 13: No. 12 Kansas State vs. No. 1 TCU | 4:00 p.m. (ESPN+)
  • Game 14: No. 2 West Virginia vs. No. 6 Colorado | 6:30 p.m. (ESPN+)

Sunday, March 8

  • Championship: Winner of Game 13 vs. Winner of Game 14 | 5:00 p.m. (ESPN+)

Big 12 women’s basketball standings

Reach USA TODAY National Women’s Sports Reporter Cydney Henderson at chenderson@gannett.com and follow her on X at@CydHenderson.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast. Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

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The Indianapolis Colts are trading their leading tackler, linebacker Zaire Franklin, to the Green Bay Packers on eve of 2026 NFL free agency, according to multiple reports.

The Packers will send defensive tackle Colby Wooden to the Colts to complete the player-for-player swap.

Franklin, 29, has been with the Colts since being selected in the seventh round of the 2018 NFL Draft. The Syracuse product spent the early portion of his career as a backup before blossoming into a full-time starter in 2022.

Franklin has recorded at least 125 tackles in four consecutive seasons. That included an NFL-high 173 in 2024, a season during which he was named to the All-Pro second team and the Pro Bowl.

That Franklin was traded isn’t a surprise. ESPN’s Adam Schefter reported March 5 that the Colts were ‘speaking with teams’ about trading for the veteran linebacker as they looked to get under the salary cap for 2026.

Franklin was entering the penultimate season of a three-year, $31.3 million extension he signed with the Colts in 2024. Trading him will save the Colts just under $5.8 million in cap space while incurring a $2.5 million dead-cap penalty, per Spotrac.com.

Here’s what to know about the trade between the Colts and Packers.

Zaire Franklin trade details

Packers get:

  • LB Zaire Franklin

Colts get:

  • DL Colby Wooden

Franklin’s arrival in Green Bay likely signals Quay Walker – a first-round pick in the 2022 NFL Draft – will be leaving the team in free agency. The Packers will replace Walker with Franklin, who will serve as an experienced counterpart for athletic, third-year linebacker Edgerrin Cooper.

The Packers will surrender the services of Wooden – a 2023 fourth-round pick from Auburn who generated a career-best 50 tackles as a full-time starter – to acquire Franklin. Wooden played 52.4% of the team’s snaps last season, third-most among defensive linemen, so Green Bay will likely seek a replacement for him during free agency or the 2026 NFL Draft.

Meanwhile, Wooden will provide the Colts with solid depth along the interior defensive line, but the team will be thin at linebacker following Franklin’s departure and the pending free agency of Germaine Pratt. Austin Ajiake is the lone remaining linebacker on the roster who played more than 100 defensive snaps last season, giving Indianapolis a big hole at the position.

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The Northeast Conference Tournament isn’t over, but the conference has already determined who it will send to the NCAA Tournament.

Long Island will be in March Madness, punching the first official ticket of 2026 after defeating Wagner on Saturday, March 7 in the NEC tournament semifinals. The conference regular-season champion Sharks clinched the spot even though they haven’t won the tournament title yet, thanks to who they will face in the championship game.

It will be Long Island vs. Mercyhurst in the NEC title, but Mercyhurst isn’t eligible for the NCAA Tournament. Since it made the final with a win over Stonehill, it paved the way for the other participant to get the automatic bid.

Why Mercyhurst isn’t eligible for NCAA Tournament?

Mercyhurst isn’t able to be in March Madness because it is in the middle of its transition to Division I.

The Lakers officially made the jump from Division II to Division I in July 2024, starting the mandatory four-year process under NCAA rules. It means Mercyhurst isn’t eligible for the NCAA Tournament until the 2027-28 season.

Another NEC team is going through a similar process in Le Moyne. The Dolphins made the jump in July 2023 and aren’t able to make the NCAA Tournament until the 2026-27 season.

There was a scenario in place where Mercyhurst and Le Moyne made the NEC conference championship game. If both of those teams would have made it, then there would have been a game between the two losing semifinalists to determine who gets the automatic spot.

Long Island will have the chance to leave no doubt in their selection by winning the conference title. The Sharks and Lakers will play on Tuesday, March 10 for the NEC crown.

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At this rate – as has become something of a recent norm in the NFL – by the time free agency officially begins on March 11 … most of the league’s available big names may have already been scooped up, whether by agreeing to contracts before then or included in trades that can be structured, if not officially finalized, right now.

And those trade winds have blown furiously in recent days, DJ Moore, Trent McDuffie and Tytus Howard already on the move – and those swaps were engineered before the biggest blockbuster of all in 2026 (so far anyway) materialized on the night of March 6. That’s when the Baltimore Ravens agreed to acquire DE Maxx Crosby in exchange for two first-round picks, including No. 14 overall this year.

The move mutually amplifies the Ravens as a Super Bowl 61 contender and the Raiders as a rebuilding bottom-feeder. It also throws another major wrinkle into Round 1 of the 2026 NFL Draft. Here’s how Crosby’s relocation further impacts our first-round projections:

1. Las Vegas Raiders – QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana

He didn’t work out at the scouting combine. Didn’t have to. When you’re 6-foot-5, 236 pounds, paced FBS with 41 TD passes, process like a microchip and just led your school to a magical national championship? Heck, there’s virtually nothing Mendoza can do at this point to help his football résumé – though interactions with reporters and his fellow combine attendees continued to burnish his reputation as an outstanding person and teammate. (And good news − now he doesn’t have to contend with McDuffie twice a year! Also, the Raiders’ exportation of Crosby means Mendoza will almost surely get immediate and needed offensive reinforcements.) The Jets are basically on the clock.

2. New York Jets – OLB/DE David Bailey, Texas Tech

The Stanford grad came into his own with the Big 12 champion Red Raiders in 2025, tying for first in the FBS with 14½ sacks while leading the field with a 20.2% pressure percentage and mixing in 19½ tackles for losses. Bailey is scheme diverse, which could also be a boon for a team switching to a three-man front and one that just offloaded DE Jermaine Johnson II, who was optimal for Tennessee’s 4-3 defense.

3. Arizona Cardinals – OLB/DE Arvell Reese, Ohio State

Arizona is the proverbial team that could be at least a year away from being a year away − and maybe two years away from being a year away after QB Kyler Murray confirmed March 3 that the team will release him. But if there was a quarterback worthy of the No. 3 overall pick … then the Jets would have taken him at No. 2. And that means Arizona GM Monti Ossenfort, who traded out of the opportunity to take future All-Pro DE Will Anderson Jr. in 2023, probably needs to be in the business of accumulating blue-chip players – and Reese projects as one. The Micah Parsons comparisons are obviously premature, but Reese, who turns 21 in August, has plenty of time to develop into a full-time pass rusher and maybe justify the comp one day. And getting to the quarterback is especially important in the NFC West, where the Cards are looking way up at their competition right now.

4. Tennessee Titans – RB Jeremiyah Love, Notre Dame

What’s the best way to advance the development of QB Cam Ward, last year’s No. 1 overall pick? How about giving him a player perhaps adjacent to Saquon Barkley or Bijan Robinson or Jahmyr Gibbs in terms of game-breaking ability and versatility? Love is an every-down back, one who’s averaged 6.9 yards per carry and caught 55 passes over the past two seasons. The Titans could keep his usage in check as a rookie with RB Tony Pollard under contract for one more season. But pairing Love and Ward could potentially create an offense primed to surge ticket sales when the Titans move into their new stadium in 2027.

5. New York Giants – LB Sonny Styles, Ohio State

Arguably the star of this year’s combine given the freakish traits (4.46 40-yard dash, 43½-inch vertical leap) he put on display Thursday, the 6-foot-5, 244-pound converted safety could immediately take over the middle of a front-loaded defense – and new Giants coach John Harbaugh is certainly accustomed to having an athletic and cerebral monster orchestrating that side of the ball.

6. Cleveland Browns – OL Francis Mauigoa, Miami (Fla.)

A three-year starter for the Hurricanes at right tackle, the 6-foot-6, 329-pound mauler could be the perfect foundation for a team that needs to rebuild its offensive line – which is the primary offseason priority, whether or not GM Andrew Berry and first-year coach Todd Monken revisit the quarterback position. Monken indicated at the combine that improved blocking was paramount in Cleveland, and the team’s pending acquisition of Tytus Howard − he’s played every line position but center in the NFL − doesn’t preclude taking Mauigoa, especially with Crosby now headed for the AFC North.

7. Washington Commanders – S Caleb Downs, Ohio State

Is he the best defender in this draft? Arguably. Can he play exceptionally in the slot, box or center field? Yep. And Washington could need a green-dot leader who can make plays behind the line given the potential departure of LB Bobby Wagner, who will be 36 next season, in free agency.

8. New Orleans Saints – WR Carnell Tate, Ohio State

The latest ready-made wideout product emerging from the Buckeyes’ pipeline, he and fellow Ohio Stater Chris Olave would give second-year QB Tyler Shough quite a tandem – and Olave needs the help given Rashid Shaheed was New Orleans’ second-most productive wideout in 2025 … despite getting traded halfway through the season.

9. Kansas City Chiefs – CB Mansoor Delane, LSU

Almost certainly the premier corner available this year, the 6-foot, 187-pound All-America approximates McDuffie’s size and has lockdown ability that should eventually allow coordinator Steve Spagnuolo to deploy him in multiple schemes and against just about any kind of receiver imaginable – as he did with McDuffie. McDuffie was known for his ability to man the slot, an area where Delane was rarely used at Virginia Tech and LSU, but even the ex-Chief mostly lined up wide the past two seasons.

10. Cincinnati Bengals – DE Rueben Bain Jr., Miami (Fla.)

Much has been made about his short arms, but they didn’t stop him from being extremely productive – often against NFL-caliber offensive tackles – for the ‘Canes. Bain bulled his way to 9½ sacks and 15½ TFLs last season and was a menace during the College Football Playoff. Cincinnati could certainly use pass rush help, especially with DE Trey Hendrickson now officially liberated and able to depart during free agency. The Crosby factor should also tempt the Bengals to bolster the blocking in front of QB Joe Burrow, but their defensive deficiencies are just too glaring.

11. Miami Dolphins – OT Spencer Fano, Utah

A rebuilding team could go in any number of directions, and free agency will certainly further shape rookie GM Jon-Eric Sullivan’s roster-altering strategy. But the O-line is always a logical place to start, particularly given the issues this one has had in recent years. Fano played both tackle spots for the Utes but almost exclusively on the right side the past two years. He’d probably be a significant upgrade over Fins RT Austin Jackson, who’s only under contract for one more year anyway, though Fano is willing to play inside if needed.

12. Dallas Cowboys – CB Jermod McCoy, Tennessee

A torn ACL cost him the entire 2025 season, but McCoy was practicing by the end of it and will be 20 months removed from the injury by the time Week 1 rolls around. DaRon Bland is the only proven corner on what will be a reimagined Dallas D in 2026, and McCoy would be a welcome addition.

13. Los Angeles Rams (from Atlanta Falcons) – WR Denzel Boston, Washington

Obviously zero need now to reach for a corner here with McDuffie inbound. LA had the league’s No. 1 passing game in 2025 – in large part due to Puka Nacua’s heroics. But Davante Adams, 33, was the only other productive wideout and battled injuries late in the season and is only under contract for one more year. Boston (6-4, 212) is the kind of supersized red-zone target (20 TD catches since 2024) and boundary receiver who could provide an easy transition from Adams while perfectly complementing Nacua.

14. Raiders (from Baltimore Ravens) – WR Makai Lemon, USC

Worth wondering if Mendoza might campaign for former Hoosiers teammate Omar Cooper Jr., who’d obviously provide a nice measure of built-in chemistry to an offense woefully short on top-tier wideouts. But as cool a story as such a reunion would be, Penn State won’t be on the Raiders’ schedule next season … or ever, at least until the NFL implements relegation.

No, the right move here would probably be for Lemon – a run-after-catch dynamo who typically works out of the slot and has been widely compared to fellow Trojan Amon-Ra St. Brown. Lemon could not only provide Mendoza with a safety valve at a stage when he’ll almost certainly need one, he should also alleviate pressure on Pro Bowl TE Brock Bowers.

15. Tampa Bay Buccaneers – TE Kenyon Sadiq, Oregon

The first tight end in combine history to record a sub-4.4 40, Sadiq, who also had a 43½-inch vert, certainly made some money in Indianapolis. He’d not only give QB Baker Mayfield another downfield weapon, this offense might need a partial reload with WR Mike Evans and TE Cade Otton currently unsigned for 2026.

16. Jets (from Indianapolis Colts) – S Dillon Thieneman, Oregon

One of the combine’s standouts, the Ducks All-American is a rangy player who can be weaponized all over the field – box, slot, center field. The Jets are also woefully thin at safety but could wisely invest in one with the pick obtained in last year’s trade of CB Sauce Gardner. Thieneman may not be a facsimile of Brian Branch, whom NYJ coach Aaron Glenn had in Detroit, but he’s a reasonable enough approximation for a defense in dire need of playmakers.

17. Detroit Lions – OT Monroe Freeling, Georgia

LT Taylor Decker originally intended to return for his 11th season in Motown, but plans change – especially in the NFL. Freeling, who’s 21, may be the best pure left tackle prospect in this draft, and his potential was evident during the combine’s on-field drills. But with only 16 college starts, he’d have to get up to speed quickly in order to fill in for Decker immediately. But, don’t forget, the Lions plucked starting RG Tate Ratledge out of Athens a year ago.

18. Minnesota Vikings – DL Caleb Banks, Florida

After importing starting DTs Javon Hargrave and Jonathan Allen a year ago, both are expected to be ex-Vikings in a few days as the team gets its salary cap in order. Banks (6-6, 327), who missed much of last fall with a broken foot, is monstrously huge and talented with freaky movement skills but also a bit raw. Still, he is the kind of player who could suck up blocks but also penetrate in coordinator Brian Flores’ aggressive defense.

19. Carolina Panthers – DT Peter Woods, Clemson

A gifted lineman who has yet to approach his maximum potential, something of a microcosm of the NFC South champions. Woods would certainly upgrade a D-line anchored by Derrick Brown, whose own ability and leadership could also help to fully unlock the All-ACC performer.

20. Cowboys (from Green Bay Packers) – OLB/DE T.J. Parker, Clemson

Dallas is transitioning to a 3-4 front under new coordinator Christian Parker but only has two notable edge rushers, 2025 second-rounder Donovan Ezeiruaku and James Houston, under contract going into next season – and no second-round pick in this year’s draft. T.J. Parker’s production dipped from 2024 to ’25, but he’s got more heft than Ezeiruaku and could be a nice complement with plenty of runway to become a really good one.

21. Pittsburgh Steelers – WR Jordyn Tyson, Arizona State

Could the draft’s host team take a young quarterback to build around in the future? Sure. Is it the best move in a seemingly weaker QB class – especially if the Steelers want to give Aaron Rodgers, assuming he returns, the best chance to take this organization further in 2026? Of course not. The lack of receiving depth behind DK Metcalf was apparent last season but especially so during his late-season suspension. Tyson, a two-time All-Big 12 choice, is a complete package – and one who was coached at ASU by Steelers legend Hines Ward.

22. Los Angeles Chargers – G Olaivavega Ioane, Penn State

Arguably the best blocker in this draft, why wouldn’t the 6-foot-4, 320-pound road grader – one with high RPMs who lined up at tight end in some packages – be coveted by a team that so values its offensive line? That could be particularly true at a time when the Bolts might have three new starters between the tackles.

23. Philadelphia Eagles – DE/OLB Akheem Mesidor, Miami (Fla.)

They didn’t generate nearly the same level of pressure in 2025 as they did during their Super Bowl run the year before. Jalyx Hunt was the only consistent edge rusher last year, which is why GM Howie Roseman rolled the dice on a midseason trade for pending free agent Jaelan Phillips. Mesidor will be 25 by draft night but could provide instant production – for a team that should be an instant contender – after leading the ACC with 12½ sacks in 2025, including 5½ in the CFP.

24. Browns (from Jacksonville Jaguars) – WR Omar Cooper Jr., Indiana

Monken’s offense needs more than an overhauled O-line. If QB Shedeur Sanders is to have any shot at developing into a long-term starter here, he not only needs better protection but also more weaponry in the passing game. Mendoza’s leading receiver for the Hoosiers last year, Cooper would provide Sanders with a reliable target out of the slot and theoretically help stabilize this offense.

25. Chicago Bears – S Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, Toledo

Need a Monster of the Midway? How about a 6-foot-4, 200-pound DB with a penchant for big hits and finding the ball? And it certainly seems like the Bears might be in dire need of safety help with All-Pro Kevin Byard and Jaquan Brisker headed for the open market.

As for Moore’s departure, it probably shouldn’t come as a huge surprise − even though he caught two epic touchdown passes to beat the Packers at Soldier Field twice last season. But, overall, Moore wasn’t necessarily a hand-in-glove fit in Ben Johnson’s offense. And given the presence of 2024 first-round WR Rome Odunze plus Luther Burden’s encouraging rookie year last season, Chicago doesn’t need to reach or prioritize backfilling Moore with a premium pick in a deep receiver draft − especially given the holes developing elsewhere on the roster.

26. Buffalo Bills – DE Keldric Faulk, Auburn

The arrival of Moore means GM Brandon Beane doesn’t have to overdraft a wideout here − which is probably what he would have had to do, in a stick-and-pick situation, given none of the best ones were likely to fall this far (despite his Carnell Tate musings at the combine). But the intriguing Faulk, a gem in need of some polish, can fill another area of concern. He should be a three-down player who can kick inside on passing downs. He has a reputation as being an excellent locker-room presence, always a huge plus, and would soften the blow given the likelihood DE Joey Bosa won’t be back in 2026.

27. San Francisco 49ers – OT Caleb Lomu, Utah

GM John Lynch admitted during the combine that he and Trent Williams, 37, are trying to find a financial compromise that keeps the legendary left tackle on the roster in 2026. But even if Williams plays another season, the Niners might be wise to get a replacement in house and – in Lomu’s case – a year to strengthen his 6-foot-6, 313-pound frame might be helpful.

28. Houston Texans – OT Blake Miller, Clemson

The All-ACC right tackle could solidify the protection in front of QB C.J. Stroud by becoming a long-term answer on an O-line that’s been in a state of flux for some time − and is now exporting Howard and Juice Scruggs. Durable, Miller averaged better than 900 snaps during three seasons for the Tigers and can play on the left side in a pinch.

29. Chiefs (from Rams) – OT Max Iheanachor, Arizona State

This had seemed like a perfect landing spot for Alabama QB Ty Simpson, who might have apprenticed for a year or two – or three – under league MVP Matthew Stafford before potentially taking the reins. Now, maybe Simpson could fill in early for Patrick Mahomes … nope. Just nope. Maybe Simpson lands elsewhere in the first round, but it certainly won’t be in K.C.

Yet Mahomes has suffered the highest sack percentage of his nine-year career over the past two seasons and went down a career-worst six times in K.C.’s Super Bowl 59 loss. As he tries to return in time for this year’s regular-season opener, despite rehabbing from a torn ACL suffered last December, upgrading his protection seems imperative – especially given the pending release of RT Jawaan Taylor for performance and compensation reasons, plus the fact that Jaylon Moore didn’t wrest a starting OT job in 2025. Iheanachor isn’t a finished product but is a gifted athlete − one who might only need a bit of time (and ace tutelage from Chiefs offensive line coach Andy Heck) to displace Moore for the primary right tackle job opposite 2025 first-rounder Josh Simmons while vastly improving the odds Mahomes won’t continue running for his life in 2026.

30. Denver Broncos – WR KC Concepcion, Texas A&M

He has average size (6-0, 196) but elite short-area burst and quickness that could make him an ideal complement to Courtland Sutton in Denver’s passing game.

31. New England Patriots – OT Kadyn Proctor, Alabama

The Pats have several needs and options − and don’t be surprised if they’re on the move, up or down − though it sure seems likely they fill their newly formed Stefon Diggs void somehow during free agency. But the obvious issue for the AFC champs during the playoffs was protecting QB Drake Maye, who was sacked 21 times in four postseason games, including six times by the Seahawks in Super Bowl 60. RT Morgan Moses is under contract for two more years but also just turned 35. Proctor can block out the sun yet is an impressively nimble athlete at 6-foot-7 and 352 pounds. He might remind Patriots fans of former Tom Brady bouncer Trent Brown and could also help launch an already strong ground game to a stratospheric level.

32. Seattle Seahawks – RB Jadarian Price, Notre Dame

While they’d certainly like to keep Super Bowl MVP Kenneth Walker III, it also didn’t sound at the combine like the reigning champs were going to pull out all the financial stops in order to keep him at the expense of other priorities − and Walker wasn’t tagged by the Seahawks on Tuesday. But Seattle doesn’t have the luxury of standing pat in the run game, either, given RB2 Zach Charbonnet tore his ACL in January. Price is a slasher who starred in a timeshare with Love at Notre Dame and could nicely fill Walker’s role – maybe Shaheed’s, too, if the Seahawks’ can’t re-sign their pivotal return ace, either.

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The Philadelphia Eagles are making Jordan Davis a very rich man.

Davis and the Eagles agreed to a three-year, $78 million extension, according to multiple reports. The deal comes with $65 million guaranteed and makes Davis the highest-paid nose tackle in NFL history.

While he wasn’t slated to be a free agent in 2026, the extension ensures that the defender won’t hit the open market next offseason. Davis will play the 2026 season on the fifth-year option, which is worth about $12.9 million, before the extension kicks in.

Drafted with the No. 13 overall pick in the 2022 NFL Draft, Davis has been a mainstay on the Philadelphia defensive line, appearing in 64 regular season games and nine playoff contests through four seasons. The 26-year-old broke out for the Eagles defense in 2025, recording a career-high 4.5 sacks and 72 total tackles after an inconsistent first three seasons.

Davis’ leap was on full display with a field goal block and return for a touchdown against the Los Angeles Rams in Week 3 of the 2025 season.

The Eagles will hope for a lot more of that in the future. Here’s what to know about Davis’ big deal with the Eagles:

Jordan Davis contract details

Davis inked a three-year, $78 million deal. Here’s a look at the full terms, per multiple reports:

  • Term: 3 years
  • Total contract value: $78 million
  • Average annual value (AAV): $26 million
  • Guaranteed money: $65 million

It makes the former Georgia Bulldog the highest-paid nose tackle in NFL history. In terms of interior defensive linemen, Davis will be tied with former teammate, Milton Williams, as the second highest-paid at $26 million in AAV.

Jordan Davis stats

Davis has played in 64 games for the Eagles since being drafted in 2022. He has recorded eight sacks, 12 quarterback hits and 162 tackles since debuting.

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Angel Obando never made it out of the Dominican Summer League, hasn’t been affiliated with a Major League Baseball team for eight years yet, at the age of 27, was one strike from pitching Nicaragua to an epic upset over Netherlands in the World Baseball Classic on March 7.

Instead, up two runs with two outs in the bottom of the ninth, the bases empty and two strikes on the batter, Obando saw a dream outcome for Dusty Baker’s Nicaragua squad turned into a nightmare by three major league stars.

Boston Red Sox center fielder Ceddane Rafaela dunked a squibber into right field – exit velocity, 76.7 mph – to bring the tying run up. San Diego Padres All-Star shortstop Xander Bogaerts dribbled a ball down the third base line – that struck the bag for a fluke double.

And then, Obando delivered a first-pitch fastball over the heart of the plate to three-time All-Star Ozzie Albies, who with a simple flick sent the ball over the right field wall at loanDepot Park, delivering the heavily favored Netherlands a stunning 4-3 victory that keeps itself alive in Pool D in Miami.

Albies got the standard ice bath after crossing home plate, though his teammates were likely too stunned to produce a garish celebration.

So, too, were the Nicaraguans.

Obando cursed into his mitt after Rafaela’s ball dropped into right, as if to foresee the coming calamity. Baker, soon to be inducted into the Hall of Fame, chomped on his toothpick, per usual, in the Nicaraguan dugout.

Yet nine innings of nearly pristine baseball got undone in just three batters, capping a brutal 18-hour sequence for Nicaragua.

They held leads of 1-0 and 3-2 against a Dominican Republic squad that thoroughly outmanned them on paper, and carried a 3-3 tie into the bottom of the sixth in their March 6 opener. But Junior Caminero’s home run snapped the deadlock and the dam burst: Dominican Republic 12, Nicaragua 3.

Undaunted, Nicaragua came back just hours later and broke a 1-1 eighth-inning tie on Jeter Downs’ two-run homer. Obando, who’d pitched 2 2/3 innings of scoreless relief against a lineup of five current or recent major league regulars, came back out to close it out.

The first two outs came easily, as a group of Nicaraguan fans gathered behind home plate to video the final out of this upset. Instead, they were left to witness a stunning Netherlands celebration.

And was just one strike, one good hop, away from doing so.

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DULUTH, GA — No. 2 seed Louisville soundly beat No. 3 North Carolina, 65-57, in the ACC semifinals on Saturday.

With 2:17 remaining in regulation, the Louisville Cardinals built a 10-point lead and closed the door on North Carolina to punch its ticket to the ACC Tournament championship.

After the final buzzer, ACC Sixth Player of the Year Imari Berry and Laura Ziegler chest bumped. ‘Yeahhhhh!’ Ziegler said as Berry smiled. The Cardinals will play defending ACC Tournament champion and No. 1 seed Duke on Sunday (1 p.m ET, ESPN).

Berry was the best player on the floor with a game-high 22 points off the bench. Ziegler added 12 points, including a clutch 3-pointer in the third quarter. Elif Istanbulluoglu had 11 points to help Louisville stay out in front. As a team, the Cardinals held North Carolina to 35% shooting from the field and 25% from deep. Louisville also forced 15 turnovers.

North Carolina had four players in double figures, but only had 10 bench points to Louisville’s 27. Additionally, the Tar Heels didn’t move the ball well against Louisville’s defense. They had just seven assists through four quarters. Elina Aarnisalo led North Carolina with 17 points and five assists, four rebounds and a steal.

Louisville’s starting forward briefly exits with fourth quarter injury

At the 6:47 mark of the fourth quarter, starter Elif Istanbulluoglu fell to the floor after getting tangled up on a play. She immediately grabbed her left ankle as she writhed in pain. Louisville head coach Jeff Walz walked out to the floor to check on her before a trainer came out.

Teammate Reyna Scott untied Istanbulluoglu’s shoe, trying to help as the Louisville forward remained on the floor. Istanbulluoglu was eventually helped to her feet, but she needed help getting to the bench before going back to the locker room. The Louisville forward returned to the bench at the 5:19 mark, and a trainer wrapped her foot before she put her shoe back on. Istanbulluoglu tested out her foot on the sidelines and rejoined a team huddle at the 4:43 mark.

Third quarter: Louisville 45, North Carolina 40

After winning the second quarter, it was Louisville in the tightly contested third quarter that gave it some breathing room. The Cardinals lead by five after three, but it feels gigantic in a game that’s going back-and-forth. Laura Ziegler’s 3-pointer with 25 seconds remaining in the quarter ignited the Gas South Arena as the Cardinals pushed into the fourth quarter.

Louisville has held North Carolina to 35% shooting for the entire matchup and forced six third-quarter turnovers. Imari Berry leads all scorers with 16 points.

Halftime: Louisville 28, North Carolina 27

North Carolina won the second quarter 17-12, paced by Mackenly Randolph, who had seven points in the period. The push from the Tar Heels pulled them within one of Louisville. The Cardinals are shooting 42% with eight turnovers. North Carolina is shooting 33% with six turnovers, with no players in double figures yet. Louisville’s Imari Berry leads all scorers with 11 points.

North Carolina fighting back from the 3-point line

The Tar Heels have withstood an early push from the Cardinals. North Carolina began a mid-second quarter push with a lovely cross-court pass in transition to Nyla Brooks for three. The Tar Heels now have four triples on the day.

First quarter: Louisville, 16, North Carolina 10

Louisville’s Imari Berry is the early winner of the first quarter. The ACC Sixth Player of the Year is 3-for-3 from deep, scoring nine points to help push the Cardinals out in front 16-10. For North Carolina, no player has scored more than five points, and the team is shooting 31% from the field.

Louisville and North Carolina going basket-for-basket early

At the 3:24 mark of the first quarter, it’s been a tug-of-war-between Louisville and North Carolina. The score is tied, 10-10, despite the Cardinals shooting 57% and the Tar Heel shooting 36% from the floor.

Louisville and North Carolina starting lineups

Here are the starting lineups for Louisville and North Carolina women’s basketball.

Louisville Cardinals starting lineup

Head coach: Jeff Walz

  • 22 Tajianna Roberts | G 5-10 – Sophomore
  • 4 Mackenly Randolph | F 6-0 – Sophomore
  • 0 Laura Ziegler | F 6-2 – Senior
  • 11 Elif Instanbulluoglu | F 6-3 – Junior
  • 9 Anaya Hardy | F 6-3 – Sophomore

North Carolina Tar Heels starting lineup

Head coach: Courtney Banghart

  • 0 Lanie Grant | G 5-9 – Sophomore
  • 2 Nyla Harris | F 6-2 – Senior
  • 17 Elina Aarnisalo | G 5-10 – Sophomore
  • 21 Ciera Toomey | F 6-4 – Sophomore
  • 24 Indya Nivar | G 5-10 – Senior

What time is North Carolina vs. Louisville?

  • Date: Saturday, March 7
  • Time: 2:30 p.m. ET
  • Location: Gas South Arena (Duluth, Georgia)

The North Carolina Tar Heels play the Louisville Cardinals in the second ACC semifinal game at 2:30 p.m. ET Saturday, March 7 at Gas South Arena in Duluth, Georgia.

Notre Dame vs. Duke: TV, streaming

  • TV: ESPN2
  • Stream: Sling TV 10
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